Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
A thick flood of thought clogs lemon teeth and pools, crude and salty behind lost red eyes. Gouge them hollow! Darken the moon. Brittle moans like a swollen beehive loom tall, fifty miles behind the lost craters. Hugs from pigs in blue, they dance and loll around the flames, a funky dark against their luminous fire. Proud and bogus (and probably ****** bitter about foul books they never read, statues made of fear in the groins of men. Ruined: hurled into a crag, torn and singing, trapped in loops - No elbow room in black hole falls. Snoring next to wives wrapped in shawls, hugging her leather Buick seat, praying to wake up gaunt and lithe. They rise, mornings, clutching onto dreams in which they fly through the cold gloom. They scratch desperate screeds onto napkins, bite squirming, disobedient tongues, souls raw, chafing in their dank enclosures. Animals! Bred to elect ourselves for slaughter.
0
Oct 22, 2013
Oct 22, 2013 at 4:20 AM UTC
The Hugo Exercise
A thick flood of thought clogs lemon teeth and pools, crude and salty behind lost red eyes. Gouge them hollow! Darken the moon. Brittle moans like a swollen beehive loom tall, fifty miles behind the lost craters. Hugs from pigs in blue, they dance and loll around the flames, a funky dark against their luminous fire. Proud and bogus (and probably ****** bitter about foul books they never read, statues made of fear in the groins of men. Ruined: hurled into a crag, torn and singing, trapped in loops - No elbow room in black hole falls. Snoring next to wives wrapped in shawls, hugging her leather Buick seat, praying to wake up gaunt and lithe. They rise, mornings, clutching onto dreams in which they fly through the cold gloom. They scratch desperate screeds onto napkins, bite squirming, disobedient tongues, souls raw, chafing in their dank enclosures. Animals! Bred to elect ourselves for slaughter.
thetryhard
Written by
American
Oct 22, 2013
Oct 22, 2013 at 4:20 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem